This book investigates patterns of fragmentation and coherence in
the international regulatory architecture of public procurement. In
the context of the major international instruments of procurement
regulation, the book studies the achievement of social and labour
policies, the most controversial and problematic instrumental uses
of public procurement practices. This work offers an innovative
comparative approach, discussing the ways in which the different
international instruments-namely the EU Procurement Directives, the
WTO Agreement on Government Procurement, the UNCITRAL Model Law and
the World Bank's Procurement Framework-are able to implement labour
and social purposes and, at the same time, ensure a regulatory
balance with the principles of efficiency and non-discrimination.
Scholarly, rigorous and timely, this will be important reading for
international trade lawyers and procurement practitioners.
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